Joshua Prince-Ramus: Designing the Seattle Central Library

95,048 views ・ 2007-01-14

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:27
I'm going to present three projects in rapid fire.
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I don't have much time to do it.
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And I want to reinforce three ideas with that rapid-fire presentation.
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The first is what I like to call a hyper-rational process.
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It's a process that takes rationality almost to an absurd level,
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and it transcends all the baggage
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that normally comes with what people would call,
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sort of a rational conclusion to something.
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And it concludes in something that you see here,
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that you actually wouldn't expect as being the result of rationality.
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The second --
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the second is that this process does not have a signature.
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There is no authorship.
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Architects are obsessed with authorship.
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This is something that has editing and it has teams,
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but in fact, we no longer see within this process,
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the traditional master architect
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creating a sketch that his minions carry out.
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And the third is that it challenges --
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and this is, in the length of this, very hard to support why,
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connect all these things --
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but it challenges the high modernist notion of flexibility.
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High modernists said we will create sort of singular spaces that are generic,
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almost anything can happen within them.
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I call it sort of "shotgun flexibility" --
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turn your head this way; shoot; and you're bound to kill something.
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So, this is the promise of high modernism:
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within a single space, actually, any kind of activity can happen.
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But as we're seeing,
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operational costs are starting to dwarf capital costs
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in terms of design parameters.
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And so, with this sort of idea,
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what happens is, whatever actually is in the building on opening day,
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or whatever seems to be the most immediate need,
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starts to dwarf the possibility and sort of subsume it,
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of anything else could ever happen.
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And so we're proposing a different kind of flexibility,
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something that we call "compartmentalized flexibility."
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And the idea is that you, within that continuum,
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identify a series of points, and you design specifically to them.
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They can be pushed off-center a little bit,
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but in the end you actually still get as much
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of that original spectrum as you originally had hoped.
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With high modernist flexibility, that doesn't really work.
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Now I'm going to talk about --
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I'm going to build up the Seattle Central Library
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in this way before your eyes in about five or six diagrams,
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and I truly mean this is the design process that you'll see.
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With the library staff and the library board,
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we settled on two core positions.
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This is the first one, and this is showing, over the last 900 years,
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the evolution of the book, and other technologies.
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This diagram was our sort of position piece about the book,
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and our position was, books are technology --
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that's something people forget --
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but it's a form of technology that will have to share its dominance
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with any other form of truly potent technology or media.
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The second premise --
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and this was something that was very difficult for us
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to convince the librarians of at first --
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is that libraries, since the inception of Carnegie Library tradition in America,
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had a second responsibility, and that was for social roles.
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Ok, now, this I'll come back to later, but something --
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actually, the librarians at first said, "No, this isn't our mandate.
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Our mandate is media, and particularly the book."
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So what you're seeing now is actually the design of the building.
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The upper diagram is what we had seen
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in a whole host of contemporary libraries that used high modernist flexibility.
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Sort of, any activity could happen anywhere.
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We don't know the future of the library; we don't know the future of the book;
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and so, we'll use this approach.
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And what we saw were buildings that were very generic, and worse --
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not only were they very generic --
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so, not only does the reading room look like the copy room
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look like the magazine area --
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but it meant that whatever issue was troubling the library at that moment
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was starting to engulf every other activity that was happening in it.
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And in this case, what was getting engulfed
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were these social responsibilities by the expansion of the book.
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And so we proposed what's at the lower diagram.
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Very dumb approach: simply compartmentalize.
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Put those things whose evolution we could predict --
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and I don't mean that we could say what would actually happen in the future,
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but we have some certainty of the spectrum of what would happen in the future --
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put those in boxes designed specifically for it,
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and put the things that we can't predict on the rooftops.
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So that was the core idea.
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Now, we had to convince the library
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that social roles were equally important to media,
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in order to get them to accept this.
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What you're seeing here is actually their program on the left.
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That's as it was given to us in all of its clarity and glory.
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Our first operation was to re-digest it back to them, show it to them and say,
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"You know what? We haven't touched it,
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but only one-third of your own program is dedicated to media and books.
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Two-thirds of it is already dedicated --
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that's the white band below, the thing you said isn't important --
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is already dedicated to social functions."
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So once we had presented that back to them,
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they agreed that this sort of core concept could work.
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We got the right to go back to first principles --
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that's the third diagram.
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We recombined everything.
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And then we started making new decisions.
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What you're seeing on the right is the design of the library,
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specifically in terms of square footage.
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On the left of that diagram, here, you'll see a series of five platforms --
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sort of combs, collective programs.
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And on the right are the more indeterminate spaces;
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things like reading rooms,
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whose evolution in 20, 30, 40 years we can't predict.
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So that literally was the design of the building.
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They signed it, and to their chagrin,
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we came back a week later, and we presented them this.
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And as you can see, it is literally the diagram on the right.
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(Laughter)
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We just sized -- no, really, I mean that, literally.
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The things on the left-hand side of the diagram,
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those are the boxes.
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We sized them into five compartments. They're super-efficient.
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We had a very low budget to work with.
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We pushed them around on the site
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to make very literal contextual relationships.
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The reading room should be able to see the water.
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The main entrance should have a public plaza in front of it
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to abide by the zoning code, and so forth.
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So, you see the five platforms, those are the boxes.
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within each one, a very discrete thing is happening.
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The area in between is sort of an urban continuum,
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these things that we can't predict their evolution to the same degree.
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To give you some sense of the power of this idea,
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the biggest block is what we call the book spiral.
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It's literally built in a very inexpensive way --
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it is a parking garage for books.
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It just so happens to be on the 6th through 10th floors of the building,
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but that is not necessarily an expensive approach.
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And it allows us to organize the entire Dewey Decimal System
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on one continuous run; no matter how it grows or contracts within the building,
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it will always have its clarity to end the sort of trail of tears
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that we've all experienced in public libraries.
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(Laughter)
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And so this was the final operation,
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which was to take these blocks as they were all pushed off kilter,
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and to hold onto them with a skin.
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That skin serves double duty, again, for economics.
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One, it is the lateral stability for the entire building;
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it's a structural element.
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But its dimensions were designed not only for structure,
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but also for holding on every piece of glass.
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The glass was then -- I'll use the word impregnated --
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but it had a layer of metal that was called "stretched metal."
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That metal acts as a microlouver,
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so from the exterior of the building, the sun sees it as totally opaque,
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but from the interior, it's entirely transparent.
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So now I'm going to take you on a tour of the building.
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Let me see if I can find it.
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For anyone who gets motion sickness, I apologize.
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So, this is the building.
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And I think what's important is, when we first unveiled the building,
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the public saw it as being totally about our whim and ego.
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And it was defended, believe it or not, by the librarians.
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They said, "Look, we don't know what it is,
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but we know it's everything that we need it to be,
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based on the observations that we've done about the program."
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This is going into one of the entries.
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So, it's an unusual building for a public library, obviously.
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So now we're going into what we call the living room.
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This is actually a program that we invented with the library.
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It was recognizing that public libraries
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are the last vestige of public free space.
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There are plenty of shopping malls that allow you to get out of the rain
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in downtown Seattle,
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but there are not so many free places
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that allow you to get out of the rain.
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So this was an unprogrammed area where people could pretty much do anything,
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including eat, yell, play chess and so forth.
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Now we're moving up into what we call the mixing chamber.
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That was the main technology area in the building.
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You'll have to tell me if I'm going too fast for you.
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And now up.
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This is actually the place that we put into the building
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so I could propose to my wife, right there.
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(Laughter)
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She said yes.
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(Laughter)
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I'm running out of time, so I'm actually going to stop.
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I can show this to you later.
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But let's see if I can very quickly get into the book spiral,
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because I think it's, as I said, the most --
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this is the main reading room -- the most unique part of the building.
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You dizzy yet?
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Ok, so here, this is the book spiral.
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So, it's very indiscernible,
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but it's actually a continuous stair-stepping.
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It allows you to, on one city block,
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go up one full floor, so that it's on a continuum.
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Ok, now I'm going to go back, and I'm going to hit a second project.
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I'm going to go very, very quickly through this.
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Now this is the Dallas Theater.
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It was an unusual client for us, because they came to us and they said,
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"We need you to do a new building.
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We've been working in a temporary space for 30 years,
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but because of that temporary space,
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we've become an infamous theater company.
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Theater is really focused in New York, Chicago and Seattle,
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with the exception of the Dallas Theater Company."
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And the very fact that they worked in a provisional space
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meant that for Beckett, they could blow out a wall;
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they could do "Cherry Orchard" and blow a hole through the floor, and so forth.
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So it was a very daunting task for us to do a brand-new building
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that could be a pristine building,
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but keep this kind of experimental nature.
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And the second is,
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they were what we call a multi-form theater,
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they do different kinds of performances in repertory.
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So they in the morning will do something in arena,
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then they'll do something in proscenium and so forth.
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And so they needed to be able to quickly transform
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between different theater organizations,
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and for operational budget reasons,
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this actually no longer happens in pretty much
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any multi-form theater in the United States,
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so we needed to figure out a way to overcome that.
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So our thought was to literally put the theater on its head:
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to take those things that were previously defined
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as front-of-house and back-of-house
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and stack them above house and below house,
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and to create what we called a theater machine.
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We invest the money in the operation of the building.
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It's almost as though the building could be placed anywhere,
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wherever you place it,
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the area under it is charged for theatrical performances.
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And it allowed us to go back to first principles,
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and redefine fly tower, acoustic enclosure, light enclosure and so forth.
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And at the push of a button,
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it allows the artistic director to move between proscenium, thrust,
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and in fact, arena and traverse and flat floor,
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in a very quick transfiguration.
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So in fact, using operational budget, we can --
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sorry, capital cost -- we can actually achieve
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what was no longer achievable in operational cost.
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And that means that the artistic director
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now has a palette that he or she can choose from,
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between a series of forms and a series of processions,
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because that enclosure around the theater that is normally trapped
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with front-of-house and back-of-house spaces has been liberated.
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So an artistic director has the ability to have a performance
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that enters in a Wagnerian procession,
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shows the first act in thrust,
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the intermission in a Greek procession,
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second act in arena, and so forth.
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So I'm going to show you what this actually means.
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This is the theater up close.
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Any portion around the theater actually can be opened discretely.
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The light enclosure can be lifted separate to the acoustic enclosure,
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so you can do Beckett with Dallas as the backdrop.
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Portions can be opened,
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so you can now actually have motorcycles drive directly into the performance,
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or you can even just have an open-air performance,
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or for intermissions.
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The balconies all move to go between those configurations,
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but they also disappear.
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The proscenium line can also disappear.
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You can bring enormous objects in,
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so in fact, the Dallas Theater Company --
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their first show will be a play about Charles Lindbergh,
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and they'll want to bring in a real aircraft.
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And then it also provides them, in the off-season,
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the ability to actually rent out their space for entirely different things.
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This is it from a distance.
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Open up entire portions for different kinds of events.
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And at night.
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Again, remove the light enclosure; keep the acoustic enclosure.
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This is a monster truck show.
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I'm going to show now the last project.
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This also is an unusual client.
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They inverted the whole idea of development.
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They came to us and they said -- unlike normal developers --
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they said, "We want to start out
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by providing a contemporary art museum in Louisville.
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That's our main goal."
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And so instead of being a developer that sees an opportunity to make money,
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they saw an ability to be a catalyst in their downtown.
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And the fact that they wanted to support the contemporary art museum
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actually built their pro forma,
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so they worked in reverse.
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And that pro forma led us
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to a mixed-use building that was very large,
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in order to support their aspirations of the art,
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but it also opened up opportunities for the art itself
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to collaborate, interact with commercial spaces
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that actually artists more and more want to work within.
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And it also charged us with thinking about how to have
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something that was both a single building
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and a credible sort of sub-building.
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So this is Louisville's skyline,
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and I'm going to take you through the various constraints
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that led to the project.
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First: the physical constraints.
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We actually had to operate on three discrete sites,
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all of them well smaller than the size of the building.
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We had to operate next to the new Muhammad Ali Center, and respect it.
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We had to operate within the 100-year floodplain.
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Now, this area floods three to four times a year,
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and there's a levee behind our site,
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similar to the ones that broke in New Orleans.
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Had to operate behind the I-64 corridor,
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a street that cuts through the middle of these separate sites.
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So we're starting to build a sort of nightmare of constraints in a bathtub.
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Underneath the bathtub are the city's main power lines.
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And there is a pedestrian corridor that they wanted to add,
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that would link a series of cultural buildings,
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and a view corridor -- because this is the historic district --
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that they didn't want to obstruct with a new building.
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(Laughter)
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And now we're going to add 1.1 million square feet.
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And if we did the traditional thing, that 1.1 million square feet --
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these are the different programs --
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the traditional thing would be to identify the public elements, place them on sites,
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and now we'd have a really terrible situation:
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a public thing in the middle of a bathtub that floods.
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And then we would size all the other elements --
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the different commercial elements:
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hotel, luxury housing, offices and so forth --
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and dump it on top.
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And we would create something that was unviable.
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In fact -- and you know this -- this is called the Time Warner Building.
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(Laughter)
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So our strategy was very simple.
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Just lift the entire block,
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flip some of the elements over,
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reposition them so they have appropriate views
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and relationships to downtown,
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and make circulation connections and reroute the road.
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So that's the basic concept,
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and now I'm going to show you what it leads to.
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Ok, it seems a very formal, willful gesture,
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but something derived entirely out of the constraints.
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And again, when we unveiled it, there was a sort of nervousness
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that this was about an architect making a statement,
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not an architect who was attempting to solve a series of problems.
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Now, within that center zone, as I said,
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we have the ability to mix a series of things.
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So here, this is sort of an x-ray --
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the towers are totally developer-driven.
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They told us the dimensions, the sizes and so forth,
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and we focused on taking all the public components --
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the lobbies, the bars --
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everything that different commercial elements would have,
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and combined it in the center, in the sort of subway map,
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in the transfer zone that would also include the contemporary art museum.
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So it creates a situation like this, where you have artists who can operate
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within an art space that also has an amazing view on the 22nd floor,
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but it also has proximity that the curator can either open or close.
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It allows people on exercise bicycles to be seen,
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or to see the art, and so forth.
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It also means that if an artist wants to invade something like a swimming pool,
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they can begin to do their exhibition in a swimming pool,
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so they're not forced to always work within the confines
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of a contemporary gallery space.
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So, how to build this.
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It's very simple: it's a chair.
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So, we begin by building the cores.
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As we're building the cores, we build the contemporary art museum at grade.
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That allows us to have incredible efficiency and cost efficiency.
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This is not a high-budget building.
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The moment the cores get to mid level,
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we finish the art museum; we put all the mechanical equipment in it;
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and then we jack it up into the air.
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This is how they build really large aircraft hangars,
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for instance, the ones that they did for the A380.
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Finish the cores, finish the meat
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and you get something that looks like this.
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Now I only have about 30 seconds,
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so I want to start an animation,
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and we'll conclude with that.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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Chris asked me to add --
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the theater is under construction,
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and this project will start construction in about a year,
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and finish in 2010.
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[identify public elements]
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[insert public elements at grade]
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[optimize tower dimensions]
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[place towers on site]
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[lift program]
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[flip!]
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[optimize program adjacencies]
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[connect to context]
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[redirect 7th street]
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2112
About this website

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